Kutchan, Hokkaido Prefecture
Seicomart - 24 min walk / 5 min drive
Customize how property information is displayed
Your preferences are automatically saved and will be applied across all pages.
3,704 houses for sale available · ¥16,000 – ¥2,156,320,000 · 1238 new this month
Japan's northernmost and largest prefecture stretches across an island bigger than Ireland, and it feels genuinely different from the rest of the country. The grid-pattern streets of Sapporo, the wide-open farmland, the Ainu cultural legacy, and a sense that there is real room to breathe — Hokkaido was settled by mainland Japanese only in earnest from the 1860s, which gives it an openness and absence of rigid tradition that appeals to people who find older Japan a little suffocating. It is the only part of Japan where the landscape itself dominates rather than accommodates. This is a place of big skies, dairy country, volcanic peaks, and coastline that stretches for 2,600km.
Getting to Sapporo is easy. New Chitose Airport is one of Japan's busiest, with direct flights from Tokyo (90 minutes), Osaka, Seoul, Shanghai, and Hong Kong. The Hokkaido Shinkansen already reaches Hakodate in the south; its extension to Sapporo is due in 2030 and will transform access. Within the prefecture, a car is essential outside Sapporo — distances are long and rural public transport is limited, but roads are well-maintained and driving in open Hokkaido is genuinely pleasurable.
The seasons are distinct to an extreme. February is the Sapporo Snow Festival — two million visitors come to see enormous ice sculptures carved in Odori Park, and the temperature stays well below zero. Summer (June–August) is warm, mild, and spectacular: lavender carpets the hills around Furano, sunflowers cover the plains, and Hokkaido's world-class produce comes into season. The dairy is some of Japan's finest, the seafood extraordinary — crab, sea urchin (uni), salmon, scallops — and the ramen scene in Sapporo has its own school (miso-based, rich, warming). Autumn brings a foliage display across Daisetsuzan National Park that rivals anything in Japan.
The people of Hokkaido have a frontier quality — warm, unpretentious, and quietly proud of where they live. The Ainu, Japan's indigenous people, have a cultural presence here that has no equivalent elsewhere in the country. Regional festivals include the Yosakoi Soran festival in Sapporo (June, 30,000+ dancers), the Abashiri Drift Ice Festival in February, and summer flower festivals across the rural interior. Niseko in winter operates a largely international village with English menus, English-speaking staff, and the kind of powder snow (15+ meters annually) that has made it one of the world's top ski destinations.
For property buyers, Hokkaido presents three completely different markets. Rural farming towns across Tokachi, Kamikawa, and Sorachi have some of Japan's cheapest real estate — livable houses with hundreds of square meters of land for ¥500,000–¥3M. Sapporo offers full major-city infrastructure at prices well below Tokyo: ¥8M–¥20M for detached houses. And Niseko is a resort investment market (¥20M–¥150M+ for ski-in/ski-out) with direct international demand. The prefecture rewards buyers willing to understand which of these three markets they are actually entering.
Seicomart - 24 min walk / 5 min drive
Seven Eleven - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 1 min walk
Seicomart - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seicomart - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Lawson - 3 min walk
Seven Eleven - 2 min walk
Seicomart - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seicomart - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seicomart - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seicomart - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Seicomart - 6 min walk / 1 min drive
Seicomart - 4 min walk / 1 min drive
Seicomart - 5 min walk / 1 min drive
Seven Eleven - 2 min walk
Seicomart - 18 min walk / 4 min drive